Pioneers didn’t have much, but what they did have they made the best of. At first, the settlers favoured the customary foods and recipes from their native countries.
But cooking over a wood fire in the hearth of a log cabin fireplace, with limited ingredients, challenged them to develop new approaches to old recipes. Their survival often depended on the advice of indigenous peoples, who knew how to use the bounty of the land.
Pioneer women who had to decide what few precious things to carry across the plains surely made one choice in common—their own individual collection of “receipts,” as recipes were then called. For them, these were reminders of a security left behind and a hope for the abundance of the future. In the interim, they simply did what they had to do to keep their families alive.
For the most part meals were informal and the food hearty. Nothing was wasted. Dried bread was made into bread pudding; a bone was turned into soup and extra milk was made into pudding or cheese. Often there was a shortage of some ingredient. As you will see from the recipes, many are based on very basic ingredients and several on how to make a meal with only a few ingredients. Recipes would not only be for food but also for perfume, home remedies, wine and soap making.
Many early memories of pioneer food concerned the frugality with which the Saints lived: “We lived on cornbread and molasses for the first winter.” “We could not get enough flour for bread … so we could only make it into a thin gruel which we called killy.” “Many times … lunch was dry bread … dipped in water and sprinkled with salt.” “These times we had nothing to waste; we had to make things last as long as we could.
60 Authentic Frontier Recipes
JERKY GRAVY
Jerky, ground or chopped fine
Little Fat or Grease
Flour
Salt & pepper
Milk
Fry the jerky until done.
Remove meat from grease, and add flour.
Add milk, and salt & pepper. Cook gravy. Add meat to gravy.
The amount of each ingredient depends on how much gravy you want.
LEMON PIE
One cup of hot water
One tablespoonful of corn-starch
One cup of white sugar
One tablespoonful of butter
Juice and grated rind of one lemon
Cook for a few minutes; add one egg; bake with a top and bottom crust.
This makes one pie.
PORK CAKE
Half a pound of salt pork chopped fine
two cups of molasses
half pound raisins chopped well
two eggs
two teaspoonfuls each:
clove, allspice and mace,
half a tablespoonful of saleratus or soda,
and flour enough to make a stiff batter.
The oven must not be too hot.
COOKED CABBAGE SALAD
1 Pint or more of chopped cooked cabbage
Add: 1 Egg well beaten
¼ Cup vinegar
1 Tsp butter
Dash of salt and pepper
Sweeten to suit taste. Simmer a few minutes and add ½ cup of thick fresh cream. Serve immediately.
WINTER RED FLANNEL HASH
A great way to use left over corned beef is to add a few new ingredients and create Red Flannel Hash. Who knows who came up with the beets, but it really is colorful, and sticks to the ribs.
1 ½ Cups chopped corned beef
1 ½ Cups chopped cooked beets
1 Medium onion, chopped
4 Cups chopped cooked potatoes
Chop ingredients separately, then mix together.
Heat all ingredients in a well- greased skillet,
slowly, loosen around the edges, and shake to prevent scorching.
After a nice crust forms on bottom, turn out on a warmed plate and serve.
If it seems a little dry add a little beef broth.
Try with a couple poached eggs, for a hearty meal.
Spiced Corn Beef
To 10 pounds of beef…
take 2 cups salt
2 cups molasses
2 tablespoonfuls saltpeter
1 tablespoonful ground pepper
1 tablespoonful cloves
Rub well into the beef.
Turn every day, and rub the mixture in.
Will be ready for use in 10 days.
1876 Cottage Cheese
Allow milk to form clabber.
Skim off cream once clabbered.
Set clabbered milk on very low heat and cut in 1 inch squares.
Place colander into clabber.
Dip off whey that rises into the colander.
When clabber becomes firm, rinse with cold water.
Squeeze liquid out and press into ball.
Crumble into bowl.
Mix curds with thick cream.
Mormon Johnnycake
Here is a form of cornbread used not only by the Mormon immigrants,
as the name indicates, but quite often by most of the immigrants traveling west.
Because of the inclusion of buttermilk, a source of fresh milk was a necessity.
2-cups of yellow cornmeal
½-cup of flour
1-teaspoon baking soda
1-teaspoon salt
Combine ingredients and mix in
2-cups of buttermilk and 2-tablespoons molasses.
Pour into a greased 9” pan and bake at 425 degrees for 20 minutes.
To get a lighter johnnycake include two beaten eggs
and 2 tablespoons melted butter.
More forgotten recipes in ‘The Lost Ways‘ . Learn the lost ways of our ancestors! Click the banner below:
Soda Biscuits
Take 1lb flour, and mix it with enough milk to make a stiff dough;
dissolve 1tsp carbonate of soda in a little milk;
add to dough with a teaspoon of salt.
Work it well together and roll out thin;
cut into round biscuits, and bake them in a moderate oven.
The yolk of an egg is sometimes added.
Vinegar Lemonade
Mix 1 to 2 tablespoons of apple cider vinegar into a 12 ounce glass of water.
Stir in 2 tablespoons of sugar to taste.
Note: The pioneers used vinegar for numerous reasons.
One reason was to add vitamin C to their diet.
Fried Apples
Fry 4 slices of bacon in a Dutch oven. Remove bacon.
Peel and slice 6 to 8 Granny Smith apples.
Put apples in Dutch oven with bacon grease,
cover and cook down the apples, but not to mush.
Serve topped with butter or cream and crumbled bacon.
They’re great for breakfast or desert!
Dutch Oven Trout
As soon as possible after catching your trout,
clean them and wipe the inside and outside of the trout
with a cloth wet with vinegar water.
Don’t put the trout in the water.
Roll the trout in a mixture of flour,
dry powdered milk,
cornmeal,
salt and pepper.
Heat deep fat in a Dutch oven and fry until crisp and golden brown.
Stuffing For A Turkey
Mix thoroughly a quart of stale bread, very finely grated;
the grated rind of a lemon;
quarter of an ounce of minced parsley and thyme,
one part thyme, two parts parsley;
and pepper and salt to season.
Add to these one unbeaten egg and half a cup of butter;
mix all well together and moisten with hot water or milk.
Other herbs than parsley or thyme may be used if preferred, and a little onion, finely minced, added if desired.
The proportions given here may be increased when more is required.
Oregon Trail Breakfast
Cornmeal Mush
1 Cup cornmeal
4 Cups boiling water
1 Tablespoon lard
1 Teaspoon salt
Dried currents
Put currents into water and bring to boil. Sprinkle cornmeal into boiling water stirring constantly, adding lard and salt. Cook for about 3 minutes. Pour in bowls and top with milk, butter and molasses.
Corn Dodgers
2 Cups yellow cornmeal
2 Tablespoons butter or margarine
1/2 Teaspoon salt
1 Tablespoon sugar
2 Cups milk
1 Teaspoon baking powder
Preheat Dutch oven to 400 degrees F.
Cook cornmeal in a saucepan with butter, salt, sugar and milk until the mixture comes to a boil. Turn off heat, cover, and let stand 5 minutes. Add baking powder. Spoon the mix onto the Dutch oven in heaping tablespoon-size balls, then bake for 10 to 15 minutes. They are done when slightly brown around the edges.
Black Pudding
Here’s an old ranch recipe courtesy of Winkie Crigler, founder and curator of The Little House Museum in Greer, Arizona.
6 Eggs
1 Cup Sweet Milk
2 Cups Flour
1 Tsp Soda
1 Cup Sugar
1 Tsp Cinnamon
1 Cup Molasses
Mix well. Pour into 1-pound can and steam for 2 to 3 hours by placing in kettle of boiling water. Keep covered.
This is to be served with a vinegar sauce:
1 Cup Sugar
1 Tbsp Butter
1 Tbsp Flour
2 Tbsp Vinegar
½ Tsp Nutmeg
Put in enough boiling water for amount of sauce wanted.
Add two slightly beaten eggs and cook stirring constantly to the desired consistency.
How To Fry Quick Doughnuts
The following recipe for doughnuts came from the March 17, 1885 Daily Missoulian. Obviously, anyone making these doughnuts will want to find a substitute for fat as a cooking oil.
Put a frying kettle half full of fat over the fire to heat. Shift together one pound of flour, one teaspoonful each of salt and bicarbonate of soda, and half a saltspoon full of grated nutmeg.
Beat half a pound of butter to a cream and add them to the flour. Beat the yokes of two eggs to a cream, add them to the first-named ingredients, beat the whites to a stiff froth and reserve them.
Mix into the flour and sugar enough sour milk to make a soft dough and then quickly add the whites of the eggs. Roll out the paste at once, shape and fry.
Corn Muffins for Breakfast
Pour one quart of boiling milk over one pint of fine cornmeal. While the mixture is still hot, add one tablespoonful of butter and a little salt, stirring the batter thoroughly.
Let is stand until cool, then add a small cup of wheat flour and two well-beaten eggs.
When mixed sufficiently, put the batter into well-greased shallow tins (or, better yet, into gem pans) and bake in a brick oven for one-half hour, or until richly browned. Serve hot.
Kid Pie
If the kid (goat) is too fat to roast, cut it into pieces and make pies. Make a sauce of cut up perejil (parsley) and put in the pies with a little sweet oil and place it in the oven.
A little before you take it out of the oven beat some eggs with vinegar or orange juice and put into the pie through the holes made in the crust for the steam to escape.
Then return pies to oven for enough time to repeat The Lord’s Prayer three times, then take the pies out and put them before the master of the house, cut it and give it to him.
Potato Pie
Boil one-quarter pound potatoes until soft, then peel them and rub them through a sieve. Add one quart of milk, three teaspoonfuls of melted butter, four beaten eggs, and sugar and nutmeg to taste. Bake as you would a custard pie.
Brown Gravy
The following is a farm recipe for gravy from the late 1880’s.
This gravy may be made in larger quantities, then kept in a stone jar and used as wanted.
Take 2 pounds of beef, and two small slices of lean bacon. Cut the meat into small pieces. Put into a stew-pan a piece of butter the size of an egg, and set over the fire.
Cut two large onions in thin slices. Put them in the butter and fry a light brown, then add the meat. Season with whole peppers.
Salt to taste. Add three cloves, and pour over one cupful of water.
Let it boil fifteen or twenty minutes, stirring it occasionally.
Then add two quarts of water, and simmer very gently for two hours.
Now strain, and when cold, remove all the fat.
To thicken this gravy, put in a stew pan a lump of butter a little larger than an egg, add two teaspoonfuls of flour, and stir until a light brown.
When cold, add it to the strained gravy, and boil up quickly. Serve very hot with the meats.
Slapjack
Take flour, little sugar and water,
mix with or without a little yeast, the latter better if at hand,
mix into paste and fry the same as fritters in clean fat.
Buffalo Jerky
Slice buffalo meat along the grain into strips 1/8 inch thick, 1/2 inch wide
and 2 to 3 inches long.
Hang them on a rack in a pan and bake at 200
degrees until dry.
To prepare outside, suspend them over a fire or drape
them on bushes to dry in the sun.
Coffee Roast
Cowboys loved their coffee.
Here’s a recipe where coffee is actually used in cooking a roast.
Cut slits in a 3 to 5 pound brisket. Insert garlic and onion into the slits.
Pour one cup of vinegar over the meat, and work it into the slits.
Marinate for 24 to 48 hours – refrigerated, of course.
Place in a Dutch oven.
Pour 2 cups of strong coffee and 2 cups water over the meat.
Simmer for 4 to 6 hours.
If necessary, add water during the cooking.
Boy in Bag
2 cups raisins
1 cup chopped walnuts (black walnuts are fine)
1 cup dark brown sugar, firmly packed
1 cup chopped suet
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon allspice
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups flour
1 ½ cups milk
1 cup chopped dried fruit of any kind.
Chop suet into small pieces no pieces being larger than a bean.
Combine with raisins, nuts, brown sugar, and chopped dried fruit.
Then mix flour, spices, and salt with baking powder.
Add gradually to fruit mixture with milk, beating well.
Put in flour sack or tie in large square of cloth. Put in kettle of boiling water and boil 3 hours, always keeping enough boiling water, and put on cloth to drain.
After about ½ hour, untie cloth and turn pudding onto dish. Let chill.
Slice and serve with hard sauce.
This pudding will keep well and is similar to plum pudding.
This can be made in camp with molasses instead of brown sugar. Or can be made with white sugar instead of either brown sugar or molasses.
This was a great favorite with chuck wagon cooks.
Tomato Catsup
One gallon skinned tomatoes
three heaping tablespoonfuls of salt
some black pepper
two of allspice
three of ground mustard
half dozen pods of red pepper
Stew all slowly together in a quart of vinegar for three hours.
Strain liquid, and simmer down to half gallon. Bottle hot and cork tight.
Thanksgiving Pudding
Pound 20 crackers fine, add 5 cups milk and let swell.
Beat well 14 eggs
pint sugar
cup molasses
2 small nutmegs
2 TSP ground clove
3 ground cinnamon
2 TSP salt
½ TSP soda.
Add to crackers.
Finally add pint of raisins. Makes two puddings.
Brown Bread
Into 3 ½ cups of boiling water mix:
1 teaspoon each soda, salt and molasses.
Mix in enough graham flour to make a stiff batter.
When the mixture cools down, stir in one pint of light sponge,
made from a cake of compressed yeast.
Put into buttered bread tins, and set in a warm place until very light.
Then bake in a rather quick oven.
This will make two medium sized loaves.
Baked Apple Pudding
3 Large apples, grated
1 cup sugar
1 cube butter
½ cup nuts
1 egg
1 cup flour
1 tsp baking soda
Pinch baking powder
½ tsp cinnamon
½ tsp nutmeg
Beat egg, sugar and butter.
Add apples and mix well.
Add dry ingredients.
Bake 30-40 minutes at 350 degrees.
Serve with cream or a white sauce.
Chicken Recipe (or any other game bird!)
This is a very simple recipe for chicken (when they had them)
or any other game bird, used often by the frontier settlers.
Start with 3 to 4 pounds of foul.
¼ tsp sage
¼ tsp pepper
½ tsp salt
¼ tsp allspice
¼ tsp basil
¼ tsp coriander
Wash the bird or birds, and pat dry.
Sprinkle cavity with mixed seasoning, except basil.
Place in Dutch oven and sprinkle with basil.
Cover and bake for 4 to 6 hours until tender.
Sourdough Cornbread
Here is a recipe to use some of the sourdough starter we shared with you previously.
1 cup starter.
Enough cornmeal to make a beatable batter
1 ½ cups milk
2 tablespoons sugar
2 eggs beaten
¼ cup warm melted butter, or fat
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon soda
Mix starter, cornmeal, milk, eggs and stir thoroughly in large bowl.
Stir in melted butter, salt and soda.
Pour into a 10 inch greased frying pan or Dutch oven,
and bake for 25 to 30 minutes.
Vinegar Pie
There were two different kinds of vinegar pie, one without eggs cooked as a cobbler in a Dutch oven, and the one below which is a custard pie.
A most important concern for a cook on the trail was to have items, especially for dessert, that do not require perishable items, and can have substitute ingredients. When the cook wanted to make the pie below, and ran out of sugar, he would substitute molasses, honey or syrup.
½ cup sugar
1 tablespoon butter
2 tablespoons vinegar
2 tablespoons flour
3 egg yokes (Save the whites for a meringue.)
1 cup water
Line a pie pan with your favorite pie crust. Bake the crust about half done before placing the mixed ingredients into it.
Bake in a slow oven until the custard is done.
If you would like you can use the egg whites for a meringue, but it is not necessary.
Calf’s Head Soup
Scald and clean the head, and boil in two gallons water with:
A shank of veal
2 carrots
3 onions
A small piece of bacon
A bunch of sweet herbs
When boiled a half hour, cut meat off head and shank.
Let the soup boil half an hour longer, and then strain it.
Put meat back in the soup and season. Thicken with butter and brown flour.
Let boil an hour longer. Just before serving add tablespoon of sugar browned in frying pan and a half pint wine. Good substitute for turtle soup.
Old-Fashioned Short Cake
One quart of nice buttermilk,
add to it one teaspoonful of soda,
quarter of a teaspoonful of salt,
one tablespoonful of unmelted lard.
Then stir in enough sifted flour to make as soft a dough as can be handled.
Roll out to about half an inch thick, cut into diamonds and bake quickly.
Mincemeat
With the holidays just around the corner we wanted to come up with something festive. So, here’s an “old timer’s” recipe for mincemeat.
Boil the neck meat of a cow, deer or elk until tender. Grind the meat.
Cook with a cup of vinegar for about three hours.
Add cooked apples, raisins, some allspice, cinnamon, cloves, molasses and black pepper.
Heat thoroughly all ingredients. If you want a little kick, add some brandy or whiskey.
The ingredients can be stored in a covered bowl in a cool place until you are ready to use them. Just before placing the mincemeat in a pie crust you can add some freshly diced apples.
Graham Bread
Sift together one and a half pints of Graham flour, half pint wheat flour, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon sugar and two teaspoons of baking powder.
Stir in one and a quarter pints of milk until it becomes a soft dough.
Pour into a well-greased bread pan and bake in rather hot oven for forty minutes. Cover the pan with brown paper for the first fifteen minutes. Remove and continue baking.
Corn-bread With Yeast
Scald one quart of sifted corn meal with boiling water to make a thick batter.
Add two tablespoonfuls of lard, half teaspoonful of salt, one tablespoonful of light brown sugar. Beat well.
When it is lukewarm add one cake of compressed yeast, dissolved in one cupful of lukewarm water. Beat together and set it to rise.
When light, pour in greased tins about half an inch thick. Bake in a moderate oven fifty minutes.
Pickled Eggs
Because it was difficult to keep eggs fresh without refrigeration, pickled eggs were a delicacy while on the trail. Once a cowboy got into town, he was able to get pickled eggs at his favorite tavern to add a little solid food to offset the beer and whiskey.
1-cup tarragon vinegar
1-cup water
2 Tbs sugar
½ tsp salt
½ tsp celery seed
1 clove garlic, minced
2 bay leaves
12 shelled hard-boiled eggs
Combine all ingredients in saucepan, except eggs. Simmer 30 minutes. Remove bay leaf. Cool. Pour over eggs in a crock or jar. Cover and refrigerate 2 to 3 days before eating.
Making Tough Beef Tender
Lay meat out smoothly and wipe it dry.
Take a coffee cup full of fine breadcrumbs, a little salt and pepper, a little powdered thyme or other sweet herb, and just enough milk to moisten to a stiff dressing. Mix well and spread over the meat. Roll it up and tie it up with twine.
Brown in salt pork fat, then put in half a pint of water. Cover and cook.
The toughest meat is made tender and nutritious when cooked in this way.
Frontier Pudding
½ Cup stone ground yellow cornmeal
¼ Cup molasses
4 Tbsp sugar
4 Tbsp butter
¼ Tsp cinnamon
¼ Cup chopped apples
1 Egg plus another egg white beaten together
¼ Tsp baking soda
3 Cups milk
Mix all ingredients except milk. Scald half the milk and mix with ingredients.
Cook for 20 minutes in preheated Dutch over at 450 degrees.
Scald remaining milk and stir into other ingredients.
Cook for 3 hours at 300 degrees.
Serve hot or cold with cream.
Sourdough Biscuits
Sourdough biscuits were a delicacy whether on the trail or at the ranch. Once a cook got a good sourdough starter he cherished it like a baby. On the trail he would store it in a dark, cool place in his chuck wagon. Here is one cook’s recipe for a sourdough starter.
2 cups of lukewarm potato water
2 cups flour
1 tablespoon sugar
Make potato water by cutting up 2 medium-sized potatoes into cubes, and boil in cups of water until tender.
Remove the potatoes and measure out two cups of the remaining liquid. (The potatoes can be used for the evening meal.)
Mix the potato water, flour and sugar into a smooth paste.
Set the mixture in a warm place until it doubles its original size.
Old West Omelet
Here’s an 1883 receipt for making an omelet:
Break all eggs into one plate. Stir rather than beat them.
For each three eggs add one teaspoon cold water. (Cold water makes the omelet light and moist.)
Salt and pepper, and place finely chopped parsley on the eggs.
Put two ounces of sweet butter in pan. When the butter is very hot, pour in the eggs.
The instant it is cooked on one side, turn it quickly and cook the other side.
Double it over when you serve it, on a very hot plate.
How To Fry Quick Doughnuts
Put a frying kettle half full of fat over the fire to heat.
Shift together one pound of flour, one teaspoonful each of salt and bicarbonate of soda, and half a saltspoon full of grated nutmeg.
Beat half a pound of butter to a cream and add them to the flour.
Beat the yokes of two eggs to a cream, add them to the first-named ingredients, beat the whites to a stiff froth and reserve them.
Mix into the flour and sugar enough sour milk to make a soft dough and then quickly add the whites of the eggs.
Roll out the paste at once, shape and fry.
Mountain Oysters
Next to donuts, mountain oysters, or less delicately stated, calf testicles, was a cowboy’s most favorite food. In 1882, Oliver Nelson, the new cook for the T5 Ranch, was almost hanged because he threw out a half peck of “clippings.” He thought the cowboys were playing a joke on him when they left them in his kitchen.
As you castrate the calf, place the freshly severed testicles in a pot of cold salt water.
Remove tough membrane and slice across the grain, into ¼ inch rounds. Rinse each piece several times under running water to remove blood.
Heat oil to 375 degrees. Soak in buttermilk. Stir together flour black pepper and seasoning. Drop individual slices, a few at a time, in flour mixture and quickly coat and remove. Carefully place each piece into oil and fry a few at a time to keep them from clumping together. When the meat floats it is done.
Fart & Dart Beans
The following is not an actual 1800’s cattle drive recipe. However, it is in the spirit of the bean dishes the cowboys ate. Even better yet, it tastes great.
Mix together one 16 ounce can of the following: Pinto beans, pork & beans, red kidney beans, lima beans, white northern beans and butter beans.
1 lb cut up bacon
1 chopped onion
½ tsp minced garlic
½ tsp prepared mustard
½ cup vinegar
1 cup brown sugar
Fry the bacon until done, but not crisp. Pour beans, bacon, onion and garlic into large pan and mix. Simmer for 15 minutes a combination of the mustard, vinegar and brown sugar.
Pour the liquid over the beans and bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Mix the beans a couple of times during the cooking process.
Fried Cakes
Here is a great treat whether you are a cowboy on a cattle drive; a member of a family on your way west; or spending the evening watching TV.
Obviously today you need to substitute an oil that builds less cholesterol than rendered beef fat. Sprinkling the Fried Cakes with sugar can make them a great dessert.
Mix well with fork 1-½ cups of flour and 1 cup water. With plenty of flour on hands and rolling surface, roll out dough to ¼ inch thickness. Cut into 2-inch squares. Heat rendered beef fat in skillet, and add dough squares. Brown on both sides. Sprinkle fried cakes with salt. Makes about 20 cakes.
Chocolate Carmels
Boil together:
a pound of white sugar
a quarter of a pound of chocolate
four tablespoons of molasses
a cup of sweet milk
a piece of butter as big as a walnut
When it will harden in water, flavor with vanilla and pour on a buttered slab.
When nearly cold, cut in squares.
Sorghum Cake
This was a dessert made either at the ranch or restaurants in town. It couldn’t be made on the cattle drive because of the need for butter and eggs, two items that would not remain fresh during a two to three month cattle drive.
2 tablespoons butter
½ cup sugar
2 eggs
1 cup sorghum molasses
½ cup water
½ teaspoon baking soda
2 cups flour
Cream butter and sugar. Add eggs. Mix Sorghum, water and soda. Add alternately with flour to creamed mixture.
Bake about 45 minutes in 10 X 10 pan at a 350-degree temperature.
Red Bean Pie
Beans were a staple of the cowboy’s food, particularly when he was on the trail. Beans could be easily stored and they were inexpensive. And although it probably wasn’t known, they’re also nutritious.
Here is yet another way the cook could feed cowboys beans.
1-cup cooked and mashed pinto beans.
1-cup sugar.
3-beaten egg yokes.
1-teaspoon vanilla.
1-teaspoon nutmeg.
Place combined ingredients in an uncooked piecrust. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Make a meringue with the leftover egg whites. Spread over baked pie and return to oven to brown.
Lazy Cobbler
This updated version of an old cowboy dessert, sometimes called dump, will serve 12 hungry cowboys.
Cook in a 12’ Dutch oven. Use 2 cans slices peaches or pineapple with syrup, 1 package of white or yellow cake mix, 1/3 stick butter and some ground cinnamon. Place fruit into oven. Spread cake mix evenly over fruit. Sprinkle cinnamon and thin slices of butter on top. . Put lid on top of oven
Place 15 hot charcoal briquettes on the bottom and 10 on the top. Bake for about 45 minutes or until you can stick a toothpick into the cake without having batter on it when you pull the toothpick out.
If you would like to mix the peaches into the cake, do so when the cobbler is about half done, and continue baking until done.
Cornfield Peas
Take freshly picked peas in your left hand and gouge them out with your right thumb until it gets sore, and then reverse hands.
Throw the shelled peas mercilessly into hot water and boil them until they ‘cave in.’ Then fry them about ten minutes in plenty of good fat meat gravy.
When you see that the union is complete, put them in a dish and eat them all.
Chicken Broth
Cut cleaned chicken into small pieces, break all bones, and place it in a pot with one-quart water and two teaspoons of salt. Cover and let simmer for 3 1/2 hours, or until the meat drops from the bones.
If necessary, add a little hot water while it is cooking. When done, there should be a pint of broth. Strain into a bowl and when cold remove all grease that is on the top.
When ready to serve, heat again.
Crackling Cornbread
For six servings sift 1 1/2 cups cornmeal, 1/4 cup flour, 1/2 teaspoon soda, and 1 teaspoon salt. To this add 2 cups buttermilk, 1 egg, and 1 cup finely chopped cracklings. (Cracklings are the skin of the hog, which has been rendered of all fat until the pieces are very crisp and almost dry.)
Blend the above ingredients well. Pour the batter into a hot, well-greased baking pan, and bake at 425 degrees for about 25 minutes.
Curing Bacon
One-peck salt to five hundred pounds pork. To five gallons water:
4 pounds salt
1 pound sugar
1 pint molasses
1 teaspoonful saltpeter
Mix, and after sprinkling the fleshy side of the ham with the salt, pack in a tight barrel. Hams first, then shoulders, middlings. Pour over the brine; leave the meat in brine from four to seven weeks.
Noodles
Shift 2 cups flour onto a pastry board. In well in center of the flour, break one egg and add 2 tablespoons warm water and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Work mixture together, adding water to make a very stiff dough.
Divide into two equal parts and roll as thin as possible. Cut into ribbons. After 30 minutes of standing, place ribbons in salty boiling water. Boil until just tender. Drain and toss with melted butter and breadcrumbs. Serve hot.
Ash Cake
This is a pioneer bread using corn meal, salt and either cold or warm water to create a batter.
Pour the batter on a hot hearth or if outside on a hot rock. Spread ashes on the top.
When the bread is brown, brush off the ashes. Some ashes will penetrate the batter, but early settlers thought it only served to enhance the flavor!
Lacy-Edged Corn Pancakes
Into 1 cup white cornmeal, 1/2 teaspoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon baking soda, mix an egg and 1 1/4 cup buttermilk.
Place tablespoon of bacon fat or lard in hot skillet. Let the shortening smoke a little before placing into it a tablespoon of batter, dropped at a distance of six inches. Dropping batter at a distance into hot shortening is essential.
Serve with syrup made by bringing to boil over a low heat 1 cup dark-brown sugar, 1/4 cup water and tablespoon butter bacon fat.
Molasses Stack Cake
Blend ½ cup buttermilk, ½ cup shortening, 1 egg, 1 cup molasses, ½ teaspoon soda and a generous sprinkling of nutmeg and cinnamon.
Then add 2 cups flour. Roll the dough thin and cut into circles the size of a small cake. Bake on a greased cookie sheet until slightly brown.
Place sweet and seasoned apple sauce between layers. Dribble a little molasses over the top and place a dollop of whipped cream over it.
Tapioca Jelly
One cupful of tapioca. Pour over it three cupfuls of cold water and let it stand three hours, then put it in a saucepan set within another pan of boiling water.
If the tapioca has soaked up the water, add a little lukewarm water to it, then boil, stirring frequently when it begins to clear. If too thick, add a little boiling water, about a tablespoonful.
When quite clear, add white sugar to taste, the juice of one lemon and very little of the grated rind.
Pour into a mould wet with cold water. Serve when cold with sugar and cream.
Kiss Pudding
One quart of milk, four tablespoons of cornstarch, mixed with a little cold milk, and five eggs.
Beat the yolks of the eggs with one cup of sugar and the corn starch. Put in the milk and let it boil until it thickens, stirring all the time.
Beat the whites: add a cup of sugar, flavor and spread over the pudding. Brown in the oven.
Want to learn more recipes and lost skills our ancestors had? Then you really need this amazing step-by-step guide. It is called The Lost Ways and it contains all the knowledge of our forefathers.
Here’s just a glimpse of what you’ll find in The Lost Ways:
Believe it or not, this is not all…
Table Of Contents:
Making Your Own Beverages: Beer to Stronger Stuff
Ginger Beer: Making Soda the Old Fashioned Way
How North American Indians and Early Pioneers Made Pemmican
Spycraft: Military Correspondence During The 1700’s to 1900’s
Wild West Guns for SHTF and a Guide to Rolling Your Own Ammo
How Our Forefathers Built Their Sawmills, Grain Mills,and Stamping Mills
How Our Ancestors Made Herbal Poultice to Heal Their Wounds
What Our Ancestors Were Foraging For? or How to Wildcraft Your Table
How Our Ancestors Navigated Without Using a GPS System
How Our Forefathers Made Knives
How Our Forefathers Made Snow shoes for Survival
How North California Native Americans Built Their Semi-subterranean Roundhouses
Our Ancestors’Guide to Root Cellars
Good Old Fashioned Cooking on an Open Flame
Learning from Our Ancestors How to Preserve Water
Learning from Our Ancestors How to Take Care of Our Hygiene When There Isn’t Anything to Buy
How and Why I Prefer to Make Soap with Modern Ingredients
Temporarily Installing a Wood-Burning Stove during Emergencies
Making Traditional and Survival Bark Bread…….
Trapping in Winter for Beaver and Muskrat Just like Our Forefathers Did
How to Make a Smokehouse and Smoke Fish
Survival Lessons From The Donner Party
Get your paperback copy HERE
From Ruff Simons, an old west history expert and former deputy, you’ll learn the techniques and methods used by the wise sheriffs from the frontiers to defend an entire village despite being outnumbered and outgunned by gangs of robbers and bandits, and how you can use their wisdom to defend your home against looters when you’ll be surrounded.
Native American ERIK BAINBRIDGE – who took part in the reconstruction of the native village of Kule Loklo in California, will show you how Native Americans build the subterranean roundhouse, an underground house that today will serve you as a storm shelter, a perfectly camouflaged hideout, or a bunker. It can easily shelter three to four families, so how will you feel if, when all hell breaks loose, you’ll be able to call all your loved ones and offer them guidance and shelter? Besides that, the subterranean roundhouse makes an awesome root cellar where you can keep all your food and water reserves year-round.
From Shannon Azares you’ll learn how sailors from the XVII century preserved water in their ships for months on end, even years and how you can use this method to preserve clean water for your family cost-free.
Mike Searson – who is a Firearm and Old West history expert – will show you what to do when there is no more ammo to be had, how people who wandered the West managed to hunt eight deer with six bullets, and why their supply of ammo never ran out. Remember the panic buying in the first half of 2013? That was nothing compared to what’s going to precede the collapse.
From Susan Morrow, an ex-science teacher and chemist, you’ll master “The Art of Poultice.” She says, “If you really explore the ingredients from which our forefathers made poultices, you’ll be totally surprised by the similarities with modern medicines.” Well…how would you feel in a crisis to be the only one from the group knowledgeable about this lost skill? When there are no more antibiotics, people will turn to you to save their ill children’s lives.
CHECK OUR survival and prepping solutions
If you found this article useful, please like our Facebook page and stay up to date with the latest articles.
WHAT TO READ NEXT:
5 TECHNIQUES TO PRESERVE MEAT IN THE WILD YOU SHOULD PRACTICE
HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN BACON (STEP BY STEP GUIDE)
A RETURN TO THE OLD PATHS: HOW TO MAKE PEMMICAN LIKE THE NATIVE AMERICANS
20 LOST RECIPES FROM THE PIONEERS: WHAT THEY COOKED ON THEIR JOURNEY WESTWARD
SEVEN CLASSIC GREAT DEPRESSION ERA RECIPES GRANDMA USED TO MAKE
POTTED MEAT: A LOST SKILL OF LONG TERM MEAT STORAGE
BACK TO BASICS: HOW TO MAKE AND PRESERVE LARD
THE BEST WAY TO STOCKPILE VEGETABLES OFF-GRID
OLD FASHIONED PRESERVING-GRANDPA’S RECIPE FOR CURED SMOKED HAM
HOW TO MAKE GUNPOWDER THE OLD FASHIONED WAY
SURVIVAL HERBAL RECIPES FROM OUR ANCESTORS
HOW TO PRESERVE MEAT FOR SURVIVAL LIKE OUR GRANDFATHERS
OTHER USEFUL RESOURCES:
The 3 Pioneer Survival Lessons We Should Learn
The Most Effective Home Defense Strategies
Old School Hacks for Off-Grid Living
The Medical Emergency Crash Course
View Comments (10)
I would make some of these items, and even modify some. Many I wouldn't eat, the ingredients like salted meats, lard and molasses (I use cane syrup instead, mild taste) and other dishes. But 2016 is a far cry from decades past, when mothers used lard and trans fats for baking like crisco and margarine. I use olive oil, butter and unprocessed salt and sugar. These recipes can be modified to suit tastes, like any recipe. People made do with what they had or starve. Interesting to read this, so I went back online to the middle ages on what farmers and serfs ate, mostly a mix of meats, beans and veg. w/ lots of bread baking, because food wasn't shipped all over the world like today. Even the 60's didn't have the choices we have now. Lots of fake foods in the stores now days, got to read the labels, buy fresh or frozen.
Laura, there is absolutely nothing wrong with LARD!
Crisco, margarine, and ALL hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated oils are a certain death sentence.
But fats, as they are found in the animal, are not bad......and that includes LARD.
If people simply ate foods as they come direct from the soil, the water, or the land.....we would all be healthy.
The death causing issue with foods is the fact that we eat foods that are "tampered with"..... That means "processed."
Be very wary of sea salt these days lest you be eating salt feom the Pacific.....beware any and ALL FOODS FROM THE OCEAN........between the Gulf Coast oil spill and the ongoing daily deluge of radiation into the ocean at Fukushima......you are playing Russian Roulette if you consume any sea food products of any kind.
Go to http://www.ENEnews.com and sign up for their newsletter. It is fabulous. Be sure to read all the comments associated with each article.......the people who post comments there are a wealth of information and the links tney provide are ones you would not stumble upon.
I am a long term Registered Nurse who has focused my entire 33+ year career teaching people about holistic health and wellness. I was able to design entire programs for patients who had significant health issues. I can tell you that whole foods were a huge part of that program and the results were astounding.
Also, look at what John McDougal teaches.........people who now have cardiovascular disease, especially atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis, can literally reverse the disease. I know many people who followed Dr. MCDougal's plan and had astounding results.....my boss was one of those people.......2 heart attacks and two bypass surgeries later, he finally listened to me and did the McDougal plan ..........he was a dead man walking in his early 50's. He is now robust and healthy in his early 70's. All the males in his family died of heart disease in their late 40's. BUT, IF YOU ARE A SMOKER.......YOU MUST STOP SMOKING!
Also........do NOT TAKE ANY DRUGS TO LOWER CHOLESTEROL.........IT IS A SCAM. There is a website....health impact news......great information there.
Also, Dr. MCDougal has a newsletter.
As well, Dr. JOe Mercola.
Good health to all!!!!!!!
Question for Mary?
it about Dr.MCDougal,how to locate his info site.
I grew up in very small rural area. I frequently see people dying at around 100 yrs. The ones dying young are eating cheap oils, white flour, degermed corn, margarine, very few vegatables and fruits, etc. The old ones raised their own animals, rendered their fats, churned butter, and gardened on a grand scale. All of them have fruit trees (plural).
I can tell you right now that no pioneer ever heard of Vitamin C. They probably knew its health benefits but Vitamin C was discovered much later.
Woody, they may not have 'known' it was vitamin C, but they knew the results of eating the foods with it and NOT eating them. Why do you think the English sailors in the 1800s were called Limeys? It was because it was realized that eating certain foods prevented diseases like scurvy. Limes were seen to be one of those foods so they had a supply on board to be added to the daily allotment of grog. Same with the pioneers, but figuring out what the new foods of the area contributed to their health must have been hard.
Hi, I tried to order this book etc. But was very disappointed to find that the payment site only allows USA, or AFP whatever that is. I am an American living in the UK. My ancestors could have written that book and more, so why are you limiting it to USA?????
Seriously dissappointed. The shit is not only hitting the fan there,. 😡
Hey D. I am James Cole, the owner of the site. You can order the e-book. The hard cover is available only in the U.S.If you are still interested in purchasing the book you can have it HERE
Great recipes, but on the black pudding recipe there is no way it could fit in a one pound can. There is much more volume than that, plus rising room.
Love these old-style recipes and so many of the sound really good. Thanks for a great share!